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Jezebel's Dust (Paperback)
Loot Price: R480
Discovery Miles 4 800
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Jezebel's Dust (Paperback)
Series: The Fred Urquhart Collection
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Loot Price R480
Discovery Miles 4 800
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Jezebel's Dust is the story of two young teenage girls infected by
the love of uniforms in Edinburgh and London early in the war. They
come from the slums and have no very high education or
expectations, but the war is opening up new possibilities. Lily
McGillivray is the chief man-eater and increasingly a 'good time
girl'. She exploits and encourages her more passive and awkward
friend Bessie Hipkiss, leading her astray with energy, as they meet
up with sailors and soldiers, Free French, Polish and American.
Ambition, sex, money and idleness are Lily's motivators. All the
old standards are defied, and civilian life gradually becomes as
dangerous as the military, in its own way. This is the novel
Urquhart most wanted to have read by a new audience. Fred Urquhart
(1912-1995) was born in Edinburgh and spent much of his childhood
there, where his grandparents lived, and later he worked in an
Edinburgh book shop for some years ('my university'). He is best
known as a superb short story writer. When he began to write it was
the heyday of short story magazines, and this was the only obvious
way to earn a living as an author. He spent the war in the
north-east of Scotland, a conscientious objector relegated to farm
work: his stories of this are agreed to rival Grassic Gibbon and
Jessie Kesson. But later he went to London, finding the louche
world of Soho more to his taste than Edinburgh correctness. Later
he lived in the country in a 'happy homosexual marriage' and he did
not return to Scotland until 1991, after his partner's death. The
Ferret Was Abraham's Daughter (1949) and Jezebel's Dust (1951) are
his two great novels of Edinburgh's poorer citizens in wartime.
Having admired Fred Urquhart's work for many years, Colin Affleck,
a fellow native of Edinburgh, became a friend of his on his return
to Scotland in 1991. Urquhart later appointed him as his literary
executor. Among Dr Affleck's writings on Urquhart is a study
focussing on his short stories, which appeared in "British
Short-Fiction Writers, 1945-1980" (edited by Dean Baldwin). Dr
Affleck is now working on a biography of Urquhart.
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